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Legendary
Member Since Jun 2007
Location: Washington DC metro area
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#1
"A new large scale research study published in American Journal of Psychiatry has found that despite a greater embrace by the public of neurobiological explanations for depression (and other mental illnesses) there has been no decrease in prejudice and discrmiination [sic] towards people who suffer from them."
... "in all of the surveys and across all vignette conditions, holding a neurobiological conception of mental illness either was unrelated to stigma or tended to increase the odds of a stigmatizing reaction" http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/...ression-stigma __________________ Now if thou would'st When all have given him o'er From death to life Thou might'st him yet recover -- Michael Drayton 1562 - 1631 |
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Legendary
Member Since Jun 2007
Location: Washington DC metro area
Posts: 15,865
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#2
Quote:
__________________ Now if thou would'st When all have given him o'er From death to life Thou might'st him yet recover -- Michael Drayton 1562 - 1631 |
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Pandita-in-training
Member Since Sep 2006
Location: Maryland
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#3
I'm tired of all the medication ads on television, like depression, allergies, COPD, bladder control, and low testosterone are all the same "weight".
__________________ "Never give a sword to a man who can't dance." ~Confucius |
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Member
Member Since Feb 2010
Location: US South East
Posts: 55
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#4
I guess I really do think it is the opposite. By the way I deleted my post because I thought it was a bit harsh and argumentative. I think that drug companies and doctors portray the symptoms of depression as being very close to the normal human emotions of sadness and dissatisfaction with one's life. I think that people are lead to believe that unhappiness is a sickness instead of a common but transient part of life. Thus it increases the idea that people should be able to "pull themselves up by the bootstraps." People think that they understand depression and have felt that way, and if they could get through it you should be able to get over it as well. They really don't see that depression is something that is severe and impossible to get over without some kind of help.
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Legendary
Member Since Jun 2007
Location: Washington DC metro area
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#5
Possibly both could be true? That is, in some cases people mix small discomforts with big disorders, and think that big ones should be able to be solved in the same ways as small ones. Then in other cases characterizing severe disorders as incomprehensible by ordinary human intelligences make them seem "not like us"? I do not agree that depression is necessarily "impossible to get over without some kind of help" but it sure helps. Personally, I have found that making it seem that there is no connection between what ordinary people experience and what the more extremes experience to be inaccurate, and harmful.
Actually, maybe I do agree that it is impossible to get over severe emotional disturbances without some kind of help. It's just that help can come in many forms, and if you are alive it is most likely you have some contact with other people, and that can be of help. Personally, I have found things I have read by other people to be often of more help than advice and therapizing and medications from the ones supposed to be professionals in the field. But that is still help from others. __________________ Now if thou would'st When all have given him o'er From death to life Thou might'st him yet recover -- Michael Drayton 1562 - 1631 Last edited by pachyderm; Sep 20, 2010 at 09:55 AM.. Reason: Impossible? addition |
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Pandita-in-training
Member Since Sep 2006
Location: Maryland
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#6
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I think, since cigarettes have been banned from TV, that psychiatric drugs should be banned from being advertised too, since they are controlled substances. Like I meant to imply, the relaxed, happy, smiling people in ads should be confined to the bladder control and low testosterone people. __________________ "Never give a sword to a man who can't dance." ~Confucius |
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sundog
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Elder
Member Since Nov 2008
Location: Sunny East Coast Florida!
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#7
__________________ Do not let your fire go out, spark by irreplaceable spark, in the hopeless swamps of the approximate, the not-quite, the not-yet, the not-at-all. Do not let the hero in your soul perish, in lonely frustration for the life you deserved, but have never been able to reach. Check your road and the nature of your battle. The world you desired can be won. It exists, it is real, it is possible, it is yours..~Ayn Rand |
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Member
Member Since Feb 2010
Location: US South East
Posts: 55
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#8
Some psychiatrists and therapists too- as they can't get insurance to pay for therapy without a diagnosis. I don't think people have to be depressed or have any serious emotional problems to benefit from therapy if they want to. I think people often get a diagnosis just so that insurance will pay for them to get help and advice in dealing with normal life issues such as grieving, relationships, children, and more. If I believed in censorship, I would fully support banning antidepressant ads though. All scientific literature supports the idea that therapy or counseling is MORE effective than medication for mild forms of depression and anxiety, yet people think they aren't being treated if they don't get drugs. So much for the war on drugs...
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shezbut, sunrise
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Legendary
Member Since Feb 2009
Location: Rochester, MN
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#9
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Perna did make a good point about all of the advertisements on tv and in magazines. I seriously believe that it turns a lot of people off. It certainly turns me off ~ and I suffer from half of the symptoms & side effects that these medications may inversely cause. Annoying advertisements really don't help me any. I think that our society has reached it's limit in sympathy and understanding of medication treatments. __________________ "Only in the darkness can you see the stars." - Martin Luther King Jr. "Forgive others not because they deserve forgiveness but because you deserve peace." - Author Unkown |
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Legendary
Member Since Aug 2007
Location: West of Tampa Bay, East of the Gulf of Mexico
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#10
Shez, those ads are really becoming so ridiculously overdone, exaggerated. The script reads right off of a "You might be depressed" flyer. I don't think the pharms will be happy until everyone is taking a handful something to fatten the pharm's wallets.
When you read about some drug's lifeline, it is interesting. They can't sell enough of a drug that was developed for one set of symptoms, so they make up a diagnosis to sell it for. (This is how Restless Leg Sydrome was born. It was also a dud; where did all the commercials for that go...?) Designer drugs. Funny how there is a drug to counteract the side effect of another drug. Whatta racket. I know many are helped, I'm not at all negating that. But I think the pharmaceutical industry is .. something else. |
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shezbut
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Grand Member
Member Since Aug 2009
Posts: 537
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#11
Greetings.
Intriguing. Have a good one. |
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